Is it possible?

<p>Is it possible that out of 54 math questions, i have 4 incorrect and 1 skipped, and I get a 680 (91st percentile) on the SAT math section. Please explain because I am really confused by it. Also if I need to score 700 or 750 plus, what is the ideal number of questions I need to complete out of 54?</p>

<p>4 wrong and 1 skipped is from 670-730 depending on the curve. From then on each problem is worth around 10-20 points. If you want a 700 plus, you should not skip any problems. If you had missed that 1 question instead of skipping it, you would have had the same score. But if you had gotten it right, you would have had a 700. 20% chance to improve while 80% to stay the same. Its probably even better odds than that because you can eliminate choices.</p>

<p>On SATs I think that you should never skip any questions, ever.</p>

<p>Oh no! You know that math question was the only one I skipped on the whole SAT. I did not skip any question in the critical reading and writing sections.</p>

<p>=o i got 5 wrong, which includes 2 omit, i got 710 =S</p>

<p>The range is from 670-730, so both of you had appropriate scores.</p>

<p>3 wrong 2 omit is the same raw score as 4 wrong 1 omit.</p>

<p>u people are intelligent.</p>

<p>i had 3 wrong 0 skipped and got 730.</p>

<p>I guess it all depends on the percentile. If a lot of people score high then your score drops a lot for even 1 incorrect. Sighs. I will try harder for the next time.</p>

<p>highschooler09, was that sarcasm? Because here at CC, 99% people get 750+s?</p>

<p>^ no way, 99% pffft</p>

<p>Yea... More like 100%. Anyone who doesn't won't admit to it.</p>

<p>nah. theres no point in lying on this site. people are trying to get help here, not show off.</p>